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Introducing: The AOC Q2775PQU monitor is great yet modest

Introducing: The AOC Q2775PQU monitor is great yet modest

Introductory

A lot of water has flowed down the Danube since a monitor test appeared on the site, and during that time the world turned a big turn. You may have recalled that after the reign of TFT, or more precisely TN + film panels, thanks to LG’s low-cost IPS technology, gamers and office displays also inherited IPS panels from monitors designed for graphics work. Here we finished testing the monitors, it was the last big step we could record in our writings. Now, however, thanks to the AOC, I am testing the monitor again!

Introducing: The AOC Q2775PQU monitor is great yet modest

The wise say that 3D is no longer cool on TVs, and I’m adding that if it’s not cool on TVs, it’s not so much on monitors. Somehow the magic is gone, people don’t like to sit in glasses in front of the monitor, it’s just enough that we’re forced after a while because we don’t see the letters otherwise.

Of course, the quality factor must remain, because you always need something that will spur sales on devices that use new technologies. If we’re lucky, those with thicker wallets will buy the new stuff, and as production rises, the price will drop, so we ordinary citizens can have access to yummy hardware.

Introducing: The AOC Q2775PQU Monitor 2 is great yet modest

Nowadays, UHD resolution is the inscription on the boxes that beats the understanding hearts. A UHD display could have been included in this article as well, but I decided to choose a much more reasonable monitor that better suits my everyday challenge for the test. This monitor has no designer base, no brutally high resolution, yet, as you will see, you may come across a great product.

Let's see what the AOC Q2775PQU can offer us!

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.